翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Miko Alley
・ Miko Ardianto
・ Miko Coffee
・ Miko Doyle
・ Miko Golubovic
・ Miko Hughes
・ Miko Lim
・ Miko Malkamäki
・ Miko Marks
・ Miko Miko Nurse
・ Miko Mission
・ Miko Mälberg
・ Mikleuš
・ Miklos Bencze
・ Miklos Gaál
Miklos Kanitz
・ Miklos Molnar
・ Miklos Perlus
・ Miklos Suba
・ Miklos Udvardy
・ Miklos Wright
・ Miklosa
・ Mikloš
・ Mikluszowice
・ Miklusėnai
・ Mikluševci
・ Miklušovce
・ Miklós
・ Miklós Ajtai
・ Miklós Ambrus


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Miklos Kanitz : ウィキペディア英語版
Miklos Kanitz


Miklos Samual Kanitz (1939–2006) was a Hungarian-Canadian Holocaust survivor living in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He narrowly escaped being transported to the German death camp at Auschwitz in June 1944 at the age of six, because a neighbor, whose son was a member of the Hungarian fascist Arrow Cross Party, risked her life to hide Kanitz, his mother, and his brother in her potato cellar for seven months until the end of the war.〔("Anne Frank Exhibit Magazine" ), Anne Frank Exhibit Committee and Jewish Free Press, retrieved April 2, 2006〕
In 1946, Kanitz's father became secretary of his local Communist Party and later still, deputy-minister of industry for Hungary. In his role as party secretary, his job was to oversee the post-war judicial system in his area. The neighbor who had saved his family appealed to him for the life of her own son, who was due to be hanged for his activities with the Arrow Cross Party. Kanitz's father refused to spare him, because, he said, "saving three Jews does not wash the blood off someone who has probably killed hundreds." 〔Sarah Gibb. "The demolition of a man," ''The StarPhoenix'', October 11, 2003〕
==Awaiting transport to Auschwitz==
Kanitz was six years old and living in Budapest with his parents, Miklos and Tereza Kanitz, and his older brother, Gyula, when the Nazis invaded Hungary in March 1944. His father had already been taken to a labor camp when his mother, brother, and himself were told to pack small bags, and make their way with 500 other Jews to an abandoned brick factory outside Budapest, where they would soon be transported, they were told, to a "safer place," which Kanitz later learned was the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz in Poland.〔 Between May 15 and July 9, 1944, 437,000 Jews were deported from Hungary, all but 15,000 of whom were sent to their deaths at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
The disused factory was a muddy field the size of a football pitch containing thousands of people, with no facilities of any kind and no shelter. Kanitz and his family spent two weeks there, waiting for the trucks to take them to the camp. "It was raining and we had absolutely no cover, no blankets, no shelter, nothing to sit or to lie down on. Just the mud," Kanitz said in an interview with ''The StarPhoenix''.〔 There was one barrel of water a day, and meals consisted of a cup of hot water with some rotting vegetables in it.
"All around, children were so afraid they were defecating. Babies were screaming. Soldiers were going around beating people for being 'pigs.' You're living in mud, and they call you a dirty goddamn Jew because you're covered in mud." 〔
Every night, a group of Jews was made to gather up the bodies of those who had died during the day. Kanitz watched as people lost their minds, as old people died, and as children were killed. "There was this family about 10 feet away from us, a mother with four children, three boys and a little girl. She was a very cute little girl, maybe two years old, curly blonde hair. But she was sick and she was crying a lot, and one afternoon I saw this guard shouting to the mother to keep this dirty little Jew quiet. But she kept on crying, so he came over and he just smashed the little girl's head in with his rifle butt." 〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Miklos Kanitz」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.